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Western tennis falls at home to No. 8 Washburn

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western (8-8, 0-3 MIAA) took on No. 8 Washburn (13-1, 4-0 MIAA) on Sunday afternoon at Genesis Health Club in St. Joseph. The Ichabods proved why they are ranked in the top-10 in the nation, defeating the Griffons by a score of 6-1.

Washburn swept the three doubles matches on Sunday, but had trouble fending off Missouri Western’s Karolina Ström and Joanna Abreu Roman. The pair nearly escaped with a win, but fell 7-6 in the final doubles match. Ström and Abreu Roman have proved to be the Griffons’ most productive doubles team, totaling 13 wins this season compared to just four losses.

The Griffons fell in five of the six matches in singles. Giving Missouri Western the point on the number one courts was Ström. Ström improves to 11-2 this spring after her 6-2, 7-5 victory on Sunday.

Bojana Vuksan came close to securing another win for the Griffons, but fell in a three-set match on the number six courts. Vuksan won the first set by a convincing 6-0 margin, but fell in the final two sets.

Missouri Western will hit the road for its Oklahoma road trip next weekend, beginning with a match against Central Oklahoma (9-2, 3-0 MIAA). The Bronchos’ only two losses this spring have come against NCAA Div. I opponents.

MWSU VS. WU
SINGLES
Karolina Ström (MWSU) def. Jacqueline Engelbrecht (WU) 6-2, 7-5
Alexis Czapinski (WU) def. Mireia Birosta (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0
Logan Morrissey (WU) def. Joanna Abreu Roman (MWSU) 6-4, 6-1
Maria Soler Valverde (WU) def. Federica Salmaso (MWSU) 6-1, 6-0
Svea Crohn (WU) def. Ciarra Gilmore (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0
Madison Lysaught (WU) def. Bojana Vuksan (MWSU) 0-6, 6-4, 10-2

DOUBLES
Czapinski/Morrissey (WU) def. Birosta/Gilmore (MWSU) 6-0
Crohn/Engelbrecht,Jacqueli (WU) def. Abreu Roman/Strom (MWSU) 7-6
Fields/Valverde (WU) def. Salmaso/Vuksan (MWSU) 6-2

— MWSU Athletics —

KC man sentenced for 3-month crime spree, 13 armed robberies

KANSAS CITY – A Kansas City man was sentenced in federal court today for his role in an armed robbery that was part of a three-month-long spree of armed robberies at metropolitan area businesses, according to the United State’s Attorney.

Donald L. Boggess -photo NDC

Donald L. Boggess, also known as “Old School,” 57, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Brian C. Wimes to 11 years and nine months in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Boggess to pay $19,796 in restitution, for which he is jointly and severally liable.

On Dec. 19, 2017, Boggess pleaded guilty to the Aug. 30, 2015, armed robbery of a 7-Eleven store at 1701 Independence Ave., Kansas City.

The crime spree, which lasted from July 25 to Oct. 20, 2015, involved 13 armed robberies of businesses in the metropolitan area in which $19,796 was stolen.

Boggess is the fourth and final defendant to be sentenced in this case. Isaac J. Williams, also known as “Dat Flyguy,” 26, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison without parole. Rahnice J. Clay, 25, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole. Deitra M. Turner, also known as “Detrix Mob Turner,” 26, of Kansas City, Mo., also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole.

During the armed robbery of the metroPCS store at 4513 Independence Ave., Kansa City, Mo., on Aug. 18, 2015, metroPCS robbery, Boggess was armed with a silver handgun while Williams stood by the door looking out. When Boggess demanded money, the sales clerk motioned to the cash register and Boggess opened the drawer, took approximately $2,627, and stuffed it into his hooded sweatshirt pocket. While taking the cash from the drawer, Boggess continued to point the handgun at the clerk and another employee. Williams and Boggess then fled the store and got into the getaway car with the Turner and Clay. All four divided and shared in the proceeds from the robbery.

During the armed robbery of the Phillips 66 gas station at 7531 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo., on Aug. 21, 2015, Williams and Turner entered the store, while Clay was at the gas pump as the lookout and Boggess remained in the car, as he was the getaway driver. The cashier was in the middle of a transaction with a customer who had just handed her a $100 bill when Williams pushed the customer out of the way and demanded the money in the register. He then pulled out a silver handgun that was wrapped in a t-shirt and pointed it at her. The cashier opened the cash register and took out all of the cash and placed it onto the counter. Williams grabbed the cash, then he and Turner (who was standing by the door as a lookout) left the store. They got into Boggess’s vehicle and Boggess drove away. The money from the robbery was split equally among the four of them.

Clay admitted that, in two robberies, she entered the store prior to the robbery then left the store when there were no other customers. A short time later, Williams and Turner entered the store. Williams, armed with a handgun, demanded money.

During the armed robbery of the metroPCS store at 723 Southwest Blvd., Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 11, 2015, Turner grabbed a blue metroPCS bag from the store to put the money in to. The employee handed over approximately $312. Williams and Turner ordered her to the back to unlock the safe, but she was unable to unlock the safe.

During the armed robbery of the GameStop store at 906 Westport Rd., Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 12, 2015, Turner took one of the employees to the back and collected game systems. The employee stated he handed over approximately $555 and games. Two witnesses outside the GameStop store saw Williams and Turner run to and get into Clay’s red Toyota; Clay, the getaway driver, was already in the car. Williams, Turner, and Clay split the money and video game systems.

EPA critical of some elements of Missouri coal ash plan

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Federal regulators say Missouri’s plan to oversee the disposal of toxic waste from coal-fired power plants fails to adequately protect human health and the environment.

The Environmental Protection Agency said in a letter to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources that several provisions in Missouri’s plan are weaker than the 2015 federal coal ash rule.

Some provisions allow the DNR to waive requirements for utility companies to clean up groundwater contamination or monitor groundwater for toxic chemicals if they can show that it doesn’t affect drinking-water supplies or harm the environment.

DNR officials declined comment on the letter from the EPA.

Andy Knott of the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign was critical of the DNR.

“I think that this is astonishing and that it’s just further evidence that the DNR cares more about the demands of the coal utilities than the needs of Missourians for clean water,” Knott said at a public hearing hosted Thursday by the DNR in Jefferson City.

Utility representatives say Missouri’s proposed rule is just as protective of human health and the environment as the federal rule. Trey Davis, president of the Missouri Energy Development Association, said Congress didn’t require state rules to be identical to federal rules.

“Nor did Congress say that each line in the rules must match federal requirements,” Davis said.

A Washington University law clinic recently found excessive levels of arsenic, boron and other harmful chemicals near all ponds that are receiving coal ash waste. The law clinic represents the Labadie Environmental Organization, a group of residents pushing Ameren Missouri to remove coal ash from its ponds at the Labadie Energy Center in eastern Missouri.

“We drink well water, and many of us are scared of that the pollution they have found will end up hurting us and our neighbors,” 12-year-old Ella Alt told DNR officials at Thursday’s hearing. She attends school near the Labadie Energy Center.

DNR is accepting feedback on its plan until Thursday and expects that the state regulations will be effective by Sept. 30.

Obituaries March 24th

Gary Dean McClanahan
1960 – 2019

Visitation
Saturday, March 30th, 2019 10:00am – 11:00am
Ridgley Christian Church

Service Information
Saturday, March 30th, 2019 11:00am
Ridgley Christian Church
Address 19995 S Ridgley Rd in Edgerton Missouri

 

Marvin L. Thieme
1939 – 2019

Marvin L. Thieme, 79, of Wetmore, died Thursday, March 21, 2019 at his home.

He was born September 16, 1939 at Wetmore, the son of Clarence and Helena Brandt Thieme. He graduated from Wetmore High School in 1957 and attended Washburn University. He served in the U.S. Army Reserve.

Marvin retired in 1993 as an Area Maintenance Supervisor for the Kansas Department of Transportation, having worked a total of thirty-five years.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

Survivors include a son, Alan Thieme and wife Heather, Liberty, MO; a daughter, Michelle Henry and husband David, Topeka; one sister, Marjorie Lanier, Wetmore and three grandchildren, Mykaela Appelhanz and Joslyn and Aidan Thieme .

A Memorial Service will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, March 28th at the Chapel Oaks Funeral Home in Holton. Inurnment will follow in the Wetmore Cemetery.

 

Billy Lee Matlock
1936 – 2019

Billy Lee Matlock, 83, of St. Joseph, passed away Saturday, March 23, 2019 at his home.

Billy was born March 1, 1936 to Irvin and Fern (Cross) Matlock in Cameron, Missouri.

Billy married Betty Mills on February 25,1955 in St. Joseph, Missouri.

Billy served in the U.S. Army from 1959 to 1960. Afterwards, Billy worked most of his years at Sherwood Medical and retired from Cryovac. Billy loved working with his hands. He was a master carpenter. He loved his cars and trucks, too many to remember. He was a loving husband, father and grandfather who will be missed.

Billy is preceded in death by his father Irvin Matlock, mother Fern Scott, and his stepfather Bill Hontz.

Billy is survived by his wife Betty, of the home; daughters Rosvetta (John) Sandusky, Lee Ann (Mike) Smiley, grandchildren; Sherry Fisher, Lisa (Joey) Findley, Derek (Brooke) Smiley, Miranda (Eric) Anderson. Great-grandsons Bryson, Clayton, Drake, Brylen and Memphis and his brother Jack (Vicki) Hontz.

Per his wishes, Mr. Matlock has been cremated under the direction of Heaton-Bowman-Smith & Sidenfaden Chapel in St. Joseph. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers the family request donations to Habitat for Humanity of Greater St. Joseph.

 

Don Smith
1927 – 2019

Don Smith, 91, St. Joseph, Missouri, passed away Thursday, March 21, 2019.

Donald Eugene Smith was born in St. Joseph on May 10, 1927. He graduated from Central High School in 1945, and then served in the U.S. Navy aboard the USS Missouri until 1946. Don was an Amoco oil dealer for 37 years, owning and operating several successful gas stations across St. Joseph. He served on the Amoco District, Regional and National Advisory Councils. He was President of the Mid-America Gasoline Dealers Association – St. Joseph District and served on the Board of Directors for the Mid-America Gasoline Dealers Association – Kansas City.
He was active in many community organizations, including the East Side Rotary Club, Moila Charity Lodge #331 and Country Club, the Legion of Honor, the Scottish Rite, and American Legion Post #59. Don was an Eagle Scout and Assistant Scout Master. Don also served on the Board of Directors of Provident Savings and Loan from 1980 to 1992.
Don loved to work in the yard, golf, be at the lake and travel. But most of all, he loved his family. He will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him.

Don married his high school sweetheart, Virginia Blanchard in 1947, and they had four children. Virginia passed away in 1979. Don later married Mary Ann Stamper, who passed away in 2010. Don also was preceded in death his parents, Clarence and Marguerite Smith; his brother, Ken Smith and two sons, Geoff and Scott.

He is survived by his daughter, Linda Sweeney (Joe) of St. Joseph; son, Gregg Smith (Vicki) of Kansas City; stepdaughters, Sheri Lowers (Bob) of Overland Park, and Chrystee Carpenter (John) of Overland Park. He also is survived by nine grandchildren and step grandchildren; Tristan Smith (Jen), Quentin Smith (Amy), McKennon Smith, Anna Heisen (Nick), Daniel Smith, Michael Sweeney (Kandus), Laura McCarthy (Bill), Matt Carpenter and Ryan Lowers, as well as 11 great-grandchildren.

Farewell services will take place at 10:00 A.M. on Tuesday, March 26, at Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Interment will be at Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will gather with friends from 5:00 to 7:00 P.M. Monday, March 25, at Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. The family requests those wishing to make donations do so to a charity of the donor’s choice.

 

Wilma M. Beaufort
1926 – 2019

Wilma M. Beaufort, 92, Brunswick, Maine, formerly of St. Joseph, Missouri, passed away peacefully Friday, March 22, 2019, at her home.

She was born August 27, 1926 in Loveland, Colorado. For 55 years she was married to the love of her life, William F. “Bill” Beaufort, who preceded her in death. Wilma retired from Mead Products. More than anything, she loved being with her family.

She was also preceded in death by her daughter, Joyce Beaufort-Miller; 2 sisters and a brother.
Survivors include her children, Carol Black, Theresa Wood (Bill), Danny Beaufort (Brenda), Mary Beaufort; 6 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; 2 great-great-grandchildren; several nieces, nephews and many family friends.

Mass of Christian Burial 10:00 A.M. Friday, St. Patrick Catholic Church. Interment Mount Olivet Cemetery. The family will gather with friends 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. Thursday, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Flowers are appreciated and for those wishing to make a contribution, the family requests they be made to Mosaic Life Care Hospice.

 

Barbara A. Teske
1942 – 2019

Barbara A. Teske, 76, of Onaga, died Saturday March 23, 2019 at the Eastridge Nursing Facility in Centralia.

She was born May 8, 1942 at Clarinda, Iowa, the daughter of Reinhard M. and Martha (Schormann) Eggerling. Her father was a Lutheran school teacher and the family lived in several different communities. In addition to Clarinda, they lived in Fenton, Iowa, Sidney and Blue Hill, Nebraska, Duluth, Kansas, and Farmers Retreat, Indiana.

Barbara was baptized at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Clarinda and confirmed at Trinity Lutheran Church in Blue Hill, and was a lifelong member of the LCMS. She started school in Sidney, attended grades fourth through ninth in Blue Hill, then graduated from Onaga High School in 1960.

As a senior in high school she worked for The Onaga Herald, gathering local news items. She worked as a teller at the First National Bank in Onaga from 1961 to 1964. In 1967 she began 37 years of working for USD #322 as a secretary to the Superintendent and Clerk of the Board. In 2000 she retired and then worked for nine years as an administrative assistant at Tessendorf-Chapel Oaks Funeral Home in Onaga.

She married O. Eugene Teske on June 12, 1960 at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church at Duluth. They were blessed with three children, Debra Mae Schmelzle (Greg), Olathe, Michael Ray Teske (Lisa), Palm Bay, Florida, and Roger Jay Teske (Jane) Fairview, Kansas. Gene preceded her in death on May 21, 2014.

They were farmers and lived in Onaga for fifteen years before moving to the home of Gene’s Grandparents, Otto and Amelia Teske, north of Onaga. Barbara moved back to Onaga in 2014.

She was a member of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church at Duluth, serving as a Sunday school teacher for twenty-five years, Young Adult Choir, and served as secretary, treasurer and member of the Memorial Committee for the Congregation, and was bulletin typist. She was a member of the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League (LWML) as a local and zone officer. She served for eighteen years on the Kansas LWML Board of Directors in various capacities, including Chairman of the Christian Growth Committee, Assistant to the District President, and District Treasurer for four years. She also was on the Planning Committee for the LWML International Convention held in Kansas City. In 1993 she was elected to the Kansas District LCMS Board of Directors and served for three terms, serving on both the Education Committee and as Chairman of the Caring Ministries Committee. Barbara was a charter member of the Onaga Young Farm Wives and the Kansas Young Farm Wives. She served as the fourth District President of the KYFW in 1968 & 1969. The Onaga Young Farm Wives organized the first Fourth of July Celebration in 1968, which was eventually adopted by the Onaga Lions Club.

Barbara is survived by her children, six grandchildren Rachel (Lucas) Shivers, Manhattan, Emily (Galen) Anderson, Kansas City, Mo., Joel (Elana) Schmelzle, Seattle, WA, Kira (Christopher) Austin and Sydney Teske, of Kansas City, Mo., and Amber Douglas (Aramis), of Chattanooga, TN. She has two great-grandsons, James D. Shivers, and Owen Anderson, and two great-granddaughters, Nora Anderson, and Phoebe Ray Teske. Other survivors include her brother, Roger (Bobbie) Eggerling, Louisville, KY, and three sisters Elaine (Dale) Clements, Oro Valley, AZ, Marilyn (Dave) Williams, Dillsboro, IN, and Janet (John) Trent, Indianapolis, IN, five nieces and many other relatives and friends.

Service of Christian Burial will be 10:00 a.m. Saturday, March 30th at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church at Duluth. Burial will follow in the Onaga Cemetery. Barbara will lie in state Friday at the Chapel Oaks Funeral Home in Onaga where a Prayer Service will be held at 6:30 p.m., followed by visitation until 8:00 p.m. Memorials are suggested to benefit St. Paul’s Benevolent Fund, The Kansas District LWML or Haskell Indian University at Lawrence, and may be sent in care of the funeral home, PO Box 312, Onaga, KS 66521.

Suddenly, cost-cutting states turn friendly to teachers

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Schoolteacher raises of $5,000 are on the table in Texas — a proposed pay hike that ranks among the biggest in the U.S. since a wave of teacher unrest began last year. But protests aren’t why the money is suddenly available.

Texas hasn’t even had a teacher strike. But as in other GOP strongholds this spring, lawmakers who have spent years clashing with public schools by slashing budgets, ratcheting up testing and cheerleading private schools are blinking in the face of election pressure as much as picket lines.

Rattled by a dreadful midterm election for Republicans — and looking ahead to 2020 — conservative-leaning states including Georgia, Oklahoma and South Carolina are pouring new money into schools. And to ensure it doesn’t go unnoticed, Republicans are making a show of a renewed commitment to public classrooms, courting voters turned off by years of cost-cutting that catered to the party’s base.

Nowhere is this political whiplash more on display than in Texas, where just two years ago conservatives pushed heavily for private school vouchers and restrictions on which bathrooms transgender students could use. That was followed last November by Republicans losing 14 seats in the Statehouse, their worst election in a generation.

To some, the message was clear. Said Republican state Sen. Kel Seliger, quoting a top GOP official “way up” whom he wouldn’t name: “Urban Texas is now blue. Suburban Texas is purple and it’s rural Texas that is still red. And then what does that mean for the future” of the party?

Seliger added, “You’re not hearing anything about a bathroom bill. You’re not hearing anyone utter the word ‘vouchers’ this session. And I think that’s significant.”

A nationwide teacher revolt that began with walkouts in West Virginia in early 2018 is still kicking. In Kentucky, recurring “sickouts” for teacher protests forced schools to cancel classes, and a six-day teacher strike in Los Angeles ended with a 6 percent pay hike and commitment to smaller classes.

Elsewhere, new worries over elections are moving Republicans to act on their own.

In Oklahoma, the state’s new CEO-turned-governor , Kevin Stitt, made giving teachers another pay boost a key plank of his campaign. He’s pushing ahead with an additional $1,200 pay increase for classroom teachers, a year after several Republican opponents of a pay package were ousted in GOP primaries. In South Carolina, a state budget passed by House lawmakers would give all teachers a 4 percent raise and bump the minimum salary for first-year teachers to $35,000. Teachers there have asked for a 10 percent raise.

Public concern about education is growing, said Pat McFerron, a GOP pollster and strategist in Oklahoma. “In a red state where Republicans are in control, it’s going to fall on Republicans.”

Texas is in the middle of the pack nationally in classroom funding for the state’s 5.5 million public school students, and teacher pay is about $7,000 below the national average. In recent years, conservatives have pushed for directing some funding to students attending private and religious schools.

That talk has now gone silent. Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who pushed the “bathroom bill” in 2017, is now calling for $5,000 teacher raises, while House Republicans have called for an extra $9 billion for public schools.

“There’s no doubt about it. When Dan Patrick goes from bathrooms and vouchers to, ‘We need to give every teacher a $5,000 pay raise,’ his pollsters are telling him you took a bath with educators this time around,” said Louis Malfaro, president of the Texas chapter of the American Federation of Teachers. “We’re nine seats off from flipping the House.”

Not all Republicans are running scared: Some GOP lawmakers in West Virginia and Arizona have proposed measures that would effectively punish striking teachers, but those bills have had little support. And while governors in at least 18 states have proposed teacher pay hikes this year, elections are not always the driving factor, said Michael Leachman of the Washington-based Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

For both parties, “you do have a political constituency that supports public schools that reaches deep into the business community, deep into school boards and parent groups,” Leachman said.

Near Austin, Shea Smith brings home about $55,000 in her 10th year teaching in the Del Valle school district. She took a half-day from work to take part in a rally for more funding this month at the Texas Capitol, where some Republican lawmakers stood side-by-side with union leaders.

“I think people are fired up because of the results in November,” Smith said.

Kansas death penalty case has implications for mentally ill

By ROXANA HEGEMAN Associated PressWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The day after Thanksgiving in 2009, James Kahler went to the home of his estranged wife’s grandmother, where he shot the two women, along with his two teenage daughters.

Kahler-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

No one — not even Kahler’s attorneys — disputes that he killed the four relatives. Instead, his lawyers argue that he was suffering from depression so severe that he experienced extreme emotional disturbance, dissociating him from reality.

What had been an open-and-shut death penalty case — Kahler was convicted and sentenced in 2011 — was upended when the U.S. Supreme Court said this past week that it would consider whether Kansas unconstitutionally abolished his right to use insanity as a defense. A ruling from the nation’s highest court could have far-reaching implications for mentally ill defendants across the nation.

Kansas is one of five states where a traditional insanity defense in which a person must understand the difference between right and wrong before being found guilty of a crime isn’t allowed. Instead, someone can cite “mental disease or defect” as a partial defense but must prove that he didn’t intend to commit the crime. The other states with similar laws are Alaska, Idaho, Montana and Utah.

“A favorable decision in this case would make it clear that the Constitution requires that a defendant be able to understand the difference between right and wrong before being found guilty, and, in cases like Mr. Kahler’s, put to death,” his defense attorney, Meryle Carver-Allmond, said in an email.

Kahler’s lawyers argued in their petition to the Supreme Court that although Kahler knew that he was shooting human beings, his mental state was so disturbed at the time that he was unable to control his actions.

“We’re hopeful that, in taking Mr. Kahler’s case, the United States Supreme Court has indicated a desire to find that the Constitution requires better of us in our treatment of mentally ill defendants,” Carver-Allmond said.

The state argues that it hasn’t abolished the insanity defense, just modified it.

“We think the state’s approach, providing for an insanity defense based on mental disease or defect, satisfies constitutional requirements,” Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said in an emailed statement. “We look forward to defending the statute and arguing our case before the Justices in the fall.”

Kahler was in the middle of a contentious divorce when he went to Dorothy Wight’s home in Burlingame, where his wife, Karen, and three children were spending the Thanksgiving holiday amid contentious divorce proceedings. He found Karen in the kitchen and shot her twice, then shot Wright and his daughter Emily in the living room. He found his daughter Lauren in an upstairs bedroom. His son, Sean, fled to a neighboring house.

Sherrie Baughn, executive director of the Kansas chapter of the National Alliance for Mental Illness, said her organization opposes execution of individuals who have a serious mental illness or mental disability when committing a crime.

“I am happy that they are looking at it and reviewing this,” Baughn said of the Supreme Court decision to take up the Kansas case. “Despite constitutional protections, the death penalty is still somewhat applied to people with mental illness or mental disabilities.”

It is unclear how often an insanity defense would be used in Kansas, because the state hasn’t really had one for so many years now, Carver-Allmond said. Without the option, seriously mentally ill defendants are often left to go to trial with little-to-no defense or forced to plead guilty on bad terms.

Missouri River drops below 30 feet, evacuation orders lifted

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Levels on the Missouri River continue to go down and area residents are returning to their homes.

The National Weather Service reports the level on the Missouri River has receded to 29.58 feet at St. Joseph at 7am, after reaching what could be a record crest. Preliminary indications are the Missouri River edged just above the record crest of 32.1 feet Friday before beginning its steady decline. NWS expects the Missouri to drop below the major flood stage Monday evening, when the river is projected to drop to 26.6 feet.

An evacuation order issued by the city of St. Joseph and Buchanan County for residents protected by the L-455 levee was lifted earlier. The levee protects the southern part of the city, including Lake Contrary.

A notice issued by the St. Joseph Police Department indicates now the only streets closed due to flooding are Stockyards, Cedar and Waterworks.

Elwood, Kansas residents are being allowed to return home after a voluntary evacuation order virtually emptied the city and closed businesses there.

 

Ghosts Of Social Media Past Haunt Kansas Governor’s Administration

The last week might have been easier for Gov. Laura Kelly if every staffer and appointee had stuck to sharing cat photos on Twitter instead of political opinions.

The Kansas GOP pounced quickly on her newly formed Democratic administration for the social media transgressions of its people. With divided government in Topeka, GOP leaders won’t miss a chance to point out potential errors.

Partisan tweets prompted the removal of a Kansas Department of Transportation staffer and, in quick succession, the withdrawal of Kelly’s nominee for the Kansas Court of Appeals. The governor’s choice to head the Kansas Department of Commerce also got a verbal lashing from Republicans because of a social media post.

“Let’s be frank. There have been some real missteps here,” Kansas Republican Party Chairman Michael Kuckelman said in an interview. “Had they not been fixed, they have serious consequences.”

The Kelly administration acted swiftly after a tweet was sent Sunday from a KDOT account calling President Donald Trump a “delusional communist.” Within hours, the tweet was taken down and the employee responsible, a media relations specialist in the agency’s south-central district, was fired.

KDOT Secretary Julie Lorenz nonetheless had to answer for it at her confirmation hearing Monday. She’d been out on a run when her chief of staff alerted her to the problem.

“I found that I ran home a little faster than I otherwise would have anticipated,” she said. “It needed to be taken care of and it was.”

Old tweets about the president derailed Kelly’s nomination to fill a seat on the Kansas Court of Appeals just days later.

Labette County District Court Judge and former Republican lawmaker Jeffry Jack had posted tweets in 2017 that included profanity, calls for gun control and insults aimed at the president.

“A president who is objectively ignorant, lazy and cowardly,” read one tweet.

That drew condemnation Monday from Senate leaders being asked to confirm the judge, and a day later Kelly herself withdrew the nomination.

“It’s unacceptable for a sitting judge, who must be seen as unbiased and impartial, to post personal political views on social media,” the governor said in a statement Tuesday morning. “It’s clear that despite a thorough review and investigation, this was missed.”

Kelly’s nomination to head the Department of Commerce is still headed for a vote in the full Senate, but without a favorable committee recommendation partially because of his social media history.

image Kansas News Service

Acting Commerce Secretary David Toland is pictured in a post from when he worked for the economic development organization Thrive Allen County. The post made a joking allusion to former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and local Republican Sen. Caryn Tyson as things that kept him up at night.

“Of concern to me,” Republican Sen. Molly Baumgardner said at Toland’s confirmation hearing, “is the disparaging representation, particularly of one of our Senate colleagues.”

Toland said it was a prank and apologized.

“It was a juvenile prank, and it shouldn’t have happened,” he said. “I regret that it did.”

He explained the image of him in bed with photos of Brownback and Tyson on the nightstand beside him was posted as a joke by the Thrive Allen staff.  Toland was sleeping in a downtown office to raise awareness for a sleep clinic at the local hospital.

Politics were also at play in his grilling, Toland suspected.

He was treasurer for Kelly’s campaign for governor. The Topeka Capital-Journal reported that Toland’s policy proposals in Allen County had clashed with business interests of the newly elected vice chair of the Kansas Republican Party, Virginia Crossland-Macha.

“This is Topeka. There are always politics,” Toland said after the first day of his hearing.

Still, Baumgardner and others said Twitter feeds and Facebook profiles should be some of the first items reviewed when considering potential nominees.

“It is 2019,” Baumgardner said. “For us to not start at social media first in the vetting process is not being self-aware of the society that we live in.”

Kelly has asked her judicial nominating committee to review the applicants for the Appeals Court job again, and this time check their social media activity before sending her new names for consideration.

Employees in the administration are subject to the executive branch social media policy and agencies sometimes have additional guidelines.

“Our staff has had numerous conversations about the importance of respectful, responsible social media behavior,” Kelly spokesperson Ashley All said.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda.

Castaneda strikes out 14 as Griffons even series at Lindenwood

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Lindenwood (13-15, 7-7) might have been the first team since Feb. 2 to score more than a run on Missouri Western baseball (11-10, 9-5) starter Anthony Castaneda, but the senior pitcher and his team still evened the series with the Lions in a 5-2 victory Saturday afternoon.

Castaneda tied the MWSU single-game strikeout record – for the second time this season – with a complete game 14-K performance.

NOTABLES

  • Castaneda shut the Lions out for the first four innings before they scratched across two in the bottom of the fifth
  • The senior recorded 14 strikeouts for the second time this season, matching his season opening performance at Oklahoma Baptist. He now has four games with 12 or more strikeouts in seven starts
  • Andrew Curry led off the fourth with a single; stole second then got to third on a wild pitch before scoring when Zach Pych reached on an error
  • Lindenwood was charged with eight errors in the game
  • After Lindenwood took a 2-1 lead in the fifth, the Griffons regained the lead with three in the sixth
  • Curry scored the first in the sixth on a wild pitch
  • Nolan Monthei drove in the other two with a single up the middle
  • The Griffons took advantage of another Lindenwood error that allowed Monthei to score an insurance run in the ninth
  • Castaneda improved to 6-0 on the season, allowing just seven hits through nine innings. He struck out 14 and walked two
  • Monthei was 2-for-4 with two RBIs and a run scored

UP NEXT

  • The rubber match comes Sunday at a re-scheduled time of 11 a.m. in St. Charles.

— MWSU Athletics —

Court: Judge went too far in dropping Kansas man’s drug case

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court says a judge went too far by dismissing a Kansas drug indictment after finding that a prosecutor violated the defendant’s right to a fair trial.

Gregory Orozco photo Wyandotte Co.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that U.S. District Court Judge Julie Robinson should retry Gregory Orozco.

Robinson dismissed Orozco’s two drug charges in December 2017 after finding that federal prosecutor Terra Morehead intimidated a witness into not testifying and belatedly disclosed evidence.

Morehead was also accused of misconduct in her handling of a case in the 1990s that caused a man to be imprisoned for nearly 23 years for a crime he didn’t commit.

The appeals court says Robinson never addressed why dismissing Orozco’s case was necessary to deter misconduct.

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